/src/gmp-6.2.1/mpn/perfsqr.c
Line  | Count  | Source (jump to first uncovered line)  | 
1  |  | /* mpn_perfect_square_p(u,usize) -- Return non-zero if U is a perfect square,  | 
2  |  |    zero otherwise.  | 
3  |  |  | 
4  |  | Copyright 1991, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2000-2002, 2005, 2012 Free Software  | 
5  |  | Foundation, Inc.  | 
6  |  |  | 
7  |  | This file is part of the GNU MP Library.  | 
8  |  |  | 
9  |  | The GNU MP Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify  | 
10  |  | it under the terms of either:  | 
11  |  |  | 
12  |  |   * the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free  | 
13  |  |     Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your  | 
14  |  |     option) any later version.  | 
15  |  |  | 
16  |  | or  | 
17  |  |  | 
18  |  |   * the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software  | 
19  |  |     Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any  | 
20  |  |     later version.  | 
21  |  |  | 
22  |  | or both in parallel, as here.  | 
23  |  |  | 
24  |  | The GNU MP Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but  | 
25  |  | WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY  | 
26  |  | or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License  | 
27  |  | for more details.  | 
28  |  |  | 
29  |  | You should have received copies of the GNU General Public License and the  | 
30  |  | GNU Lesser General Public License along with the GNU MP Library.  If not,  | 
31  |  | see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.  */  | 
32  |  |  | 
33  |  | #include <stdio.h> /* for NULL */  | 
34  |  | #include "gmp-impl.h"  | 
35  |  | #include "longlong.h"  | 
36  |  |  | 
37  |  | #include "perfsqr.h"  | 
38  |  |  | 
39  |  |  | 
40  |  | /* change this to "#define TRACE(x) x" for diagnostics */  | 
41  |  | #define TRACE(x)  | 
42  |  |  | 
43  |  |  | 
44  |  |  | 
45  |  | /* PERFSQR_MOD_* detects non-squares using residue tests.  | 
46  |  |  | 
47  |  |    A macro PERFSQR_MOD_TEST is setup by gen-psqr.c in perfsqr.h.  It takes  | 
48  |  |    {up,usize} modulo a selected modulus to get a remainder r.  For 32-bit or | 
49  |  |    64-bit limbs this modulus will be 2^24-1 or 2^48-1 using PERFSQR_MOD_34,  | 
50  |  |    or for other limb or nail sizes a PERFSQR_PP is chosen and PERFSQR_MOD_PP  | 
51  |  |    used.  PERFSQR_PP_NORM and PERFSQR_PP_INVERTED are pre-calculated in this  | 
52  |  |    case too.  | 
53  |  |  | 
54  |  |    PERFSQR_MOD_TEST then makes various calls to PERFSQR_MOD_1 or  | 
55  |  |    PERFSQR_MOD_2 with divisors d which are factors of the modulus, and table  | 
56  |  |    data indicating residues and non-residues modulo those divisors.  The  | 
57  |  |    table data is in 1 or 2 limbs worth of bits respectively, per the size of  | 
58  |  |    each d.  | 
59  |  |  | 
60  |  |    A "modexact" style remainder is taken to reduce r modulo d.  | 
61  |  |    PERFSQR_MOD_IDX implements this, producing an index "idx" for use with  | 
62  |  |    the table data.  Notice there's just one multiplication by a constant  | 
63  |  |    "inv", for each d.  | 
64  |  |  | 
65  |  |    The modexact doesn't produce a true r%d remainder, instead idx satisfies  | 
66  |  |    "-(idx<<PERFSQR_MOD_BITS) == r mod d".  Because d is odd, this factor  | 
67  |  |    -2^PERFSQR_MOD_BITS is a one-to-one mapping between r and idx, and is  | 
68  |  |    accounted for by having the table data suitably permuted.  | 
69  |  |  | 
70  |  |    The remainder r fits within PERFSQR_MOD_BITS which is less than a limb.  | 
71  |  |    In fact the GMP_LIMB_BITS - PERFSQR_MOD_BITS spare bits are enough to fit  | 
72  |  |    each divisor d meaning the modexact multiply can take place entirely  | 
73  |  |    within one limb, giving the compiler the chance to optimize it, in a way  | 
74  |  |    that say umul_ppmm would not give.  | 
75  |  |  | 
76  |  |    There's no need for the divisors d to be prime, in fact gen-psqr.c makes  | 
77  |  |    a deliberate effort to combine factors so as to reduce the number of  | 
78  |  |    separate tests done on r.  But such combining is limited to d <=  | 
79  |  |    2*GMP_LIMB_BITS so that the table data fits in at most 2 limbs.  | 
80  |  |  | 
81  |  |    Alternatives:  | 
82  |  |  | 
83  |  |    It'd be possible to use bigger divisors d, and more than 2 limbs of table  | 
84  |  |    data, but this doesn't look like it would be of much help to the prime  | 
85  |  |    factors in the usual moduli 2^24-1 or 2^48-1.  | 
86  |  |  | 
87  |  |    The moduli 2^24-1 or 2^48-1 are nothing particularly special, they're  | 
88  |  |    just easy to calculate (see mpn_mod_34lsub1) and have a nice set of prime  | 
89  |  |    factors.  2^32-1 and 2^64-1 would be equally easy to calculate, but have  | 
90  |  |    fewer prime factors.  | 
91  |  |  | 
92  |  |    The nails case usually ends up using mpn_mod_1, which is a lot slower  | 
93  |  |    than mpn_mod_34lsub1.  Perhaps other such special moduli could be found  | 
94  |  |    for the nails case.  Two-term things like 2^30-2^15-1 might be  | 
95  |  |    candidates.  Or at worst some on-the-fly de-nailing would allow the plain  | 
96  |  |    2^24-1 to be used.  Currently nails are too preliminary to be worried  | 
97  |  |    about.  | 
98  |  |  | 
99  |  | */  | 
100  |  |  | 
101  | 0  | #define PERFSQR_MOD_MASK       ((CNST_LIMB(1) << PERFSQR_MOD_BITS) - 1)  | 
102  |  |  | 
103  | 0  | #define MOD34_BITS  (GMP_NUMB_BITS / 4 * 3)  | 
104  | 0  | #define MOD34_MASK  ((CNST_LIMB(1) << MOD34_BITS) - 1)  | 
105  |  |  | 
106  |  | #define PERFSQR_MOD_34(r, up, usize)        \  | 
107  | 0  |   do {               \ | 
108  | 0  |     (r) = mpn_mod_34lsub1 (up, usize);       \  | 
109  | 0  |     (r) = ((r) & MOD34_MASK) + ((r) >> MOD34_BITS);    \  | 
110  | 0  |   } while (0)  | 
111  |  |  | 
112  |  | /* FIXME: The %= here isn't good, and might destroy any savings from keeping  | 
113  |  |    the PERFSQR_MOD_IDX stuff within a limb (rather than needing umul_ppmm).  | 
114  |  |    Maybe a new sort of mpn_preinv_mod_1 could accept an unnormalized divisor  | 
115  |  |    and a shift count, like mpn_preinv_divrem_1.  But mod_34lsub1 is our  | 
116  |  |    normal case, so lets not worry too much about mod_1.  */  | 
117  |  | #define PERFSQR_MOD_PP(r, up, usize)          \  | 
118  |  |   do {                  \ | 
119  |  |     if (BELOW_THRESHOLD (usize, PREINV_MOD_1_TO_MOD_1_THRESHOLD)) \  | 
120  |  |       {                 \ | 
121  |  |   (r) = mpn_preinv_mod_1 (up, usize, PERFSQR_PP_NORM,   \  | 
122  |  |         PERFSQR_PP_INVERTED);     \  | 
123  |  |   (r) %= PERFSQR_PP;            \  | 
124  |  |       }                 \  | 
125  |  |     else                \  | 
126  |  |       {                 \ | 
127  |  |   (r) = mpn_mod_1 (up, usize, PERFSQR_PP);      \  | 
128  |  |       }                 \  | 
129  |  |   } while (0)  | 
130  |  |  | 
131  |  | #define PERFSQR_MOD_IDX(idx, r, d, inv)       \  | 
132  | 0  |   do {               \ | 
133  | 0  |     mp_limb_t  q;           \  | 
134  | 0  |     ASSERT ((r) <= PERFSQR_MOD_MASK);       \  | 
135  | 0  |     ASSERT ((((inv) * (d)) & PERFSQR_MOD_MASK) == 1);   \  | 
136  | 0  |     ASSERT (MP_LIMB_T_MAX / (d) >= PERFSQR_MOD_MASK);   \  | 
137  | 0  |                 \  | 
138  | 0  |     q = ((r) * (inv)) & PERFSQR_MOD_MASK;     \  | 
139  | 0  |     ASSERT (r == ((q * (d)) & PERFSQR_MOD_MASK));   \  | 
140  | 0  |     (idx) = (q * (d)) >> PERFSQR_MOD_BITS;     \  | 
141  | 0  |   } while (0)  | 
142  |  |  | 
143  |  | #define PERFSQR_MOD_1(r, d, inv, mask)        \  | 
144  | 0  |   do {               \ | 
145  | 0  |     unsigned   idx;           \  | 
146  | 0  |     ASSERT ((d) <= GMP_LIMB_BITS);        \  | 
147  | 0  |     PERFSQR_MOD_IDX(idx, r, d, inv);       \  | 
148  | 0  |     TRACE (printf ("  PERFSQR_MOD_1 d=%u r=%lu idx=%u\n", \ | 
149  | 0  |        d, r%d, idx));       \  | 
150  | 0  |     if ((((mask) >> idx) & 1) == 0)       \  | 
151  | 0  |       {               \ | 
152  | 0  |   TRACE (printf ("  non-square\n"));      \ | 
153  | 0  |   return 0;           \  | 
154  | 0  |       }                \  | 
155  | 0  |   } while (0)  | 
156  |  |  | 
157  |  | /* The expression "(int) idx - GMP_LIMB_BITS < 0" lets the compiler use the  | 
158  |  |    sign bit from "idx-GMP_LIMB_BITS", which might help avoid a branch.  */  | 
159  |  | #define PERFSQR_MOD_2(r, d, inv, mhi, mlo)      \  | 
160  | 0  |   do {               \ | 
161  | 0  |     mp_limb_t  m;           \  | 
162  | 0  |     unsigned   idx;           \  | 
163  | 0  |     ASSERT ((d) <= 2*GMP_LIMB_BITS);        \  | 
164  | 0  |                 \  | 
165  | 0  |     PERFSQR_MOD_IDX (idx, r, d, inv);        \  | 
166  | 0  |     TRACE (printf ("  PERFSQR_MOD_2 d=%u r=%lu idx=%u\n", \ | 
167  | 0  |        d, r%d, idx));       \  | 
168  | 0  |     m = ((int) idx - GMP_LIMB_BITS < 0 ? (mlo) : (mhi));  \  | 
169  | 0  |     idx %= GMP_LIMB_BITS;         \  | 
170  | 0  |     if (((m >> idx) & 1) == 0)         \  | 
171  | 0  |       {               \ | 
172  | 0  |   TRACE (printf ("  non-square\n"));      \ | 
173  | 0  |   return 0;           \  | 
174  | 0  |       }                \  | 
175  | 0  |   } while (0)  | 
176  |  |  | 
177  |  |  | 
178  |  | int  | 
179  |  | mpn_perfect_square_p (mp_srcptr up, mp_size_t usize)  | 
180  | 0  | { | 
181  | 0  |   ASSERT (usize >= 1);  | 
182  |  |  | 
183  | 0  |   TRACE (gmp_printf ("mpn_perfect_square_p %Nd\n", up, usize)); | 
184  |  |  | 
185  |  |   /* The first test excludes 212/256 (82.8%) of the perfect square candidates  | 
186  |  |      in O(1) time.  */  | 
187  | 0  |   { | 
188  | 0  |     unsigned  idx = up[0] % 0x100;  | 
189  | 0  |     if (((sq_res_0x100[idx / GMP_LIMB_BITS]  | 
190  | 0  |     >> (idx % GMP_LIMB_BITS)) & 1) == 0)  | 
191  | 0  |       return 0;  | 
192  | 0  |   }  | 
193  |  |  | 
194  |  | #if 0  | 
195  |  |   /* Check that we have even multiplicity of 2, and then check that the rest is  | 
196  |  |      a possible perfect square.  Leave disabled until we can determine this  | 
197  |  |      really is an improvement.  It it is, it could completely replace the  | 
198  |  |      simple probe above, since this should throw out more non-squares, but at  | 
199  |  |      the expense of somewhat more cycles.  */  | 
200  |  |   { | 
201  |  |     mp_limb_t lo;  | 
202  |  |     int cnt;  | 
203  |  |     lo = up[0];  | 
204  |  |     while (lo == 0)  | 
205  |  |       up++, lo = up[0], usize--;  | 
206  |  |     count_trailing_zeros (cnt, lo);  | 
207  |  |     if ((cnt & 1) != 0)  | 
208  |  |       return 0;     /* return of not even multiplicity of 2 */  | 
209  |  |     lo >>= cnt;     /* shift down to align lowest non-zero bit */  | 
210  |  |     lo >>= 1;     /* shift away lowest non-zero bit */  | 
211  |  |     if ((lo & 3) != 0)  | 
212  |  |       return 0;  | 
213  |  |   }  | 
214  |  | #endif  | 
215  |  |  | 
216  |  |  | 
217  |  |   /* The second test uses mpn_mod_34lsub1 or mpn_mod_1 to detect non-squares  | 
218  |  |      according to their residues modulo small primes (or powers of  | 
219  |  |      primes).  See perfsqr.h.  */  | 
220  | 0  |   PERFSQR_MOD_TEST (up, usize);  | 
221  |  |  | 
222  |  |  | 
223  |  |   /* For the third and last test, we finally compute the square root,  | 
224  |  |      to make sure we've really got a perfect square.  */  | 
225  | 0  |   { | 
226  | 0  |     mp_ptr root_ptr;  | 
227  | 0  |     int res;  | 
228  | 0  |     TMP_DECL;  | 
229  |  | 
  | 
230  | 0  |     TMP_MARK;  | 
231  | 0  |     root_ptr = TMP_ALLOC_LIMBS ((usize + 1) / 2);  | 
232  |  |  | 
233  |  |     /* Iff mpn_sqrtrem returns zero, the square is perfect.  */  | 
234  | 0  |     res = ! mpn_sqrtrem (root_ptr, NULL, up, usize);  | 
235  | 0  |     TMP_FREE;  | 
236  |  | 
  | 
237  | 0  |     return res;  | 
238  | 0  |   }  | 
239  | 0  | }  |